Epidemiological research revealed that elderly people or patients suffering from chronic diseases are more susceptible to COVID-19 and are subject to a relatively high death risk [7]. HD patients tend to have a weak immune system, and their frequent trips to hospital expose them under a higher risk of viral infection. These factors, adding that the hemodialysis room where HD patients stay is a crowded, enclosed space, make HD patients one of the most susceptible populations to COVID-19. Research results showed that HD patients get a pneumonia incidence rate 14–16 times of ordinary people [8]. On the other hand, we observed a significantly small number of epidemiological reports on HD patients.
Results showed that HD patients in this research have an incidence rate of 11.8% (74/627). The median age of 74 HD patients infected with COVID-19 is 63 years old, older than that in most published research [9, 10]. Cough (41.9%) was the most common incipient clinical symptoms in this research, followed by fatigue, fever and dyspnea, while anorexia, diarrhea and vomiting were among the less common symptoms, which was slightly different from existing reports that featured fever as the most common symptoms on COVID-19 patients [6, 10, 11]. In addition, 22.4% confirmed COVID-19 patients were asymptomatic, which suggests certain difficulty in the early identification and screening of COVID-19 patients in the clinical aspects. The lung imaging scans of confirmed patients mostly present bilateral opacity (76.2%), multiple opacity (52.3%), and patchy opacity (63.6%). While some existing research reported multiple ground-glass lesion as the typical lung lesion in CT scans of COVID-19 patients [12], this research found that ground-glass changes in patients’ lung CT scans claim a relatively small proportion (9.1%). Relevant guidelines [5, 13] stated that COVID-19 patients in early stage presented the imaging features of multiple small patchy opacity or interstitial changes, followed by bilateral multiple ground-glass opacity and even pulmonary consolidation in severe cases. In this regard, screening work and examination of lung CT scans should be conducted as early as possible to achieve timely detection of the disease and quarantine for confirmed patients and contain the potential spread of COVID-19 in HD patients.
This research surveyed 14 death cases, with a median survival time of 7 days and the cough being the most prominent symptom for death group. In terms of clinical features, the CRP level in dead patients was higher than surviving patients. The group of deceased patients also presented a significantly lower level of albumin and phosphate, two indicators of the patient’s nutritional status, indicating that it’s imperative to ensure sufficient nutrition for patients infected with COVID-19. In addition, this research found dead patients have a lower PTH standard-reaching rate than surviving patients, which runs consistent with the findings of other studies that a PTH level lower than the reference range can be a significant predictive factor leading to the death of patients [14]. Therefore, increasing attention should be paid to measuring PTH level of COVID-19 patients to ensure timely intervention and treatment of the disease.
This research is a single-center study with a relatively small sample size. During our analysis, for the purpose of avoiding the omission of patients with false negative results in RT-PCR, we used the diagnostic criteria in the Revised Diagnosis and Treatment Planning of the Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia (the Fifth Trial Edition) and included both clinically diagnosed cases and confirmed cases, which consequently resulted in an increase in the false positive rate in patients. In addition, given that the therapies received by HD patients after they were confirmed with COVID-19 could hardly be traced, this research lacks the description for treatment measures. Supplementary contents and corrections to the findings of this article could be made in follow-up studies as the outbreak evolves.